Digital Transgender Archive
Issues of Urania published in 1925, including Nos. 49-50 (Jan-Apr), Nos. 51-52 (May-Aug), and Nos. 53-54 (Sep-Dec). Urania was a privately circulated feminist journal published in England from 1916-1940. The journal's foundational philosophy revolved around the abolition of gender, as the founders believed true feminist liberation could not be realized within a binary gender system.
These issues include criticisms of the institution of marriage, the global state of feminism and women's suffrage, reproduction and population, educational reform, and gender essentialism.
Item Actions
- Identifier
- vt150j709
- Collection
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Urania
- Institution
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LSE Archives & Special Collections
- Creator(s)
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Baty, Thomas
Cornish, Dorothy Helen
Gore-Booth, Eva
Roper, Esther
Wade, Jessey
Clyde, Irene
- Contributor(s)
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Benson, Stella
Rolland, Romain
Carman, Bliss
Meunier, Maris
Corday, Charlotte
Pearse Cranch, Christopher
- Publisher
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London: T.Baty
- Date Issued
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1925
- Genre
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Periodicals
- Places
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Canada
China
England
South Africa
Japan
France
India
United States
Czechoslovakia
Estonia
- Topic(s)
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Birth control
Clothing
Crossdressing
Educational change
Feminism
Feminists
First-wave feminism
First-wave feminists
Gender non-conforming people
Gender roles
Marriage
Non-binary identity
Poetry
Spirituality
Suffragettes
- Resource Type
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Text
- Language
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English
French
- Rights
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No known copyright
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